Lance Armstrong Comes Clean On Oprah

In a highly anticipated interview with Oprah Winfrey, disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong came clean about his use of performance enhancing drugs—including EPO, blood doping, and more drugs like cortisone—throughout his vaunted Tour de France victories. He said he did not believe it was possible to win the Tour de France seven times without doping. "I will start my answer by saying this is too late," he said of his admission. "It's too late for probably most people and that's my fault. I view this situation as one big lie I repeated a lot of times." Armstrong said he began doping in the mid-'90s. He said the last time he doped was in 2005.

The interview, which was conducted on Monday, aired only hours after Armstrong was officially stripped of his bronze medal by the IOC and months after a release of documents by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency painted him as a serial doper who manipulated and threatened his friends, teammates, and competitors.

Immediately on Twitter, reporters, cycling fans, and people just watching it because it was on Oprah reacted to Armstrong's confession. One line that seemed to stand out with numerous sports reporters was Armstrong's assertion that the doping program was not the biggest in sports history.

Armstrong says it wasn't bigger than East Germany's program. He's right there.